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      Despite big Marvel and Star Wars shows, Disney+ falls short of its goals

      Samuel Axon · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 14 May, 2021 - 18:47

    Meta-sitcom/adventure series <em>WandaVision</em> was one of Disney+

    Enlarge / Meta-sitcom/adventure series WandaVision was one of Disney+'s most successful recent shows. (credit: YouTube/Disney+)

    Analysts expected Disney+ to reach 109 million subscribers in Disney's most recent financial quarter, but the streaming service fell short, landing at 103.6 million. The shortfall resulted in lower revenues than expected for the company and a small stock price stumble.

    Alongside word that Netflix also saw fairly slow growth in its quarter, the news suggests that there is, in fact, a limit to the explosive growth that streaming platforms have experienced amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Still, Disney is staying the course with its current strategy of pumping out TV series in established Disney brands like Marvel and Star Wars, as well as releasing new motion pictures on the platform at the same time they premiere in theaters.

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      Jouer sur Steam en multijoueur sans posséder les jeux devient encore plus simple

      Julien Lausson · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Wednesday, 3 March, 2021 - 12:38

    Steam Remote Play Together

    Sur Steam, la fonctionnalité Remote Play Together permet de partager des jeux multijoueurs avec ses contacts, même s'ils ne les possèdent pas, à condition d'avoir une connexion à Internet, pour pouvoir streamer les parties. Début mars, la Remote Play Together est devenue encore plus intéressante, puisqu'il n'y a même plus besoin de compte Steam. [Lire la suite]

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    L'article Jouer sur Steam en multijoueur sans posséder les jeux devient encore plus simple est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

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      US Court: Pirate Streaming Sites Operator Must Pay $16.8m in Damages

      Andy Maxwell · news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 1 March, 2021 - 18:35 · 4 minutes

    Streaming Key In November 2019, US broadcaster DISH Network filed a lawsuit in a Texas district court targeting the operators of 15 domains used to illegally stream DISH content to the public.

    The domains – Freetvall.net, Freetvall.xyz, Freetvall.me, Freetvall.live, Livetvcafe.com, Livetvcafe.net, Livetvcafe.me, Time4tv.com, Time4tv.net, Time4tv.me, Cricket-tv.net, Crickettv.me, Tv4embed.com, and A1livetv.com – offered a wide range of embedded TV channels, not only from DISH but other broadcasters including Sky and ESPN.

    DISH’s Exclusive License to Broadcast in the United States

    In its complaint , DISH listed around two dozen channels offered by the network of sites. Through licensing agreements, DISH holds the exclusive rights to distribute and publicly perform the channels in the United States. The sites had no such permission.

    As the lawsuit progressed, DISH concluded that all of the sites were operated by one person, who was subsequently named as Nauman Khalid.

    DISH claimed that the defendant provided users in the United States with links to unauthorized streams of its protected channels by collecting them from other locations on the Internet and organizing them on his websites. The whole operation was monetized with advertising.

    DISH Notified Defendant of Infringement Dozens of Times

    During a period spanning several years, DISH notified Khalid “at least” 49 times that he was infringing the company’s rights by providing infringing links to a US audience. DISH backed up this effort by sending similar notifications to Internet services utilized by the sites but Khalid “intentionally interfered” with these by changing providers or using new links.

    DISH alleged that Khalid “induced and materially contributed” to offenses carried out in breach of US copyright law. Khalid was served in Pakistan but chose not to participate in the legal action against him in the US. As a result, DISH sought to obtain a default judgment from the court.

    Court’s Decision – Direct and Contributory Infringement

    In a memorandum opinion and order signed last week, the court found that the works at issue in the suit were authored in countries outside the United States but because those countries are all signatories to the Berne Convention , all are protected under US copyright law. In any event, all works were registered with the US Copyright Office.

    In respect of the allegations of direct infringement, the court found that when Khalid provided links that enabled the retransmission of DISH content, that infringed the company’s rights to publicly perform those works. The court further found that Khalid had knowledge of these infringements since he had received at least some of the takedown notices sent by DISH.

    Moving to DISH’s allegations of contributory copyright infringement, the court found that by selecting infringing links to channels and by organizing and maintaining them, Khalid “created the audience” to complete the direct infringement carried out by the unlicensed provider of the channels. As such, the allegations of inducement and material contribution were found to valid.

    Question of Damages

    When claiming damages, DISH had the option to choose actual damages and profits or statutory damages – the company settle on the latter. That meant the broadcaster could obtain $30,000 per infringed work and up to $150,000 if the infringement was committed willfully.

    DISH elected to pursue statutory damages for 112 works registered with the US Copyright Office, to the maximum of $150,000 per infringement. The company alleged that even after sending takedown notices, Khalid continued to provide access to the broadcaster’s channels.

    In support of its claim for maximum statutory damages, DISH told the court that Khalid had been infringing its rights for between five and nine years, claiming that its channels were viewed over 5.5 million times. The court agreed that the websites had caused DISH to incur substantial losses, adding that the offending was considerable.

    “Because of the sheer breadth and duration of the infringement, the failure of Khalid to participate in this proceeding, his willingness to defy almost 50 notices of infringement and to evade service providers’ attempts to halt the infringement, and the likelihood that he profited from the infringement and caused substantial losses of revenue to DISH, the court finds that an award of maximum statutory damages — $150,000 per registered work — is appropriate,” the decision reads.

    “Therefore, the total amount of damages that Khalid must pay DISH for the infringement of the 112 registered works is $16,800,000.”

    Permanent Injunction

    In addition to damages, DISH demanded a permanent injunction and the court was happy to comply. First turning to Khalid and anyone acting in concert with him, the court issued an injunction enjoining all parties from transmitting, streaming, distributing, linking, hosting, promoting or advertising any of DISH’s protected channels in the United States.

    Moving to non-parties, such as those providing any kind of technical service enabling the defendant to infringe, the court permanently enjoined all entities providing servers, hosting (including data centers), domain hosting/registration/proxy services, CDNs, advertising and social media, from doing business with Khalid that involves breaching DISH’s rights.

    Specifically, the court ordered VeriSign and any other registry or registrar of the listed domains to transfer them to DISH within 48 hours so that the broadcaster may “fully control and use” them. Additionally, registries and registrars were ordered to restrict any future domain names used by Khalid to provide access to DISH works by disabling them within 48 hours of receiving a complaint from DISH.

    “Such domain names shall remain disabled so that the websites and content located at the domain names are inaccessible to the public until further order of this Court, or until DISH provides written notice to the registry or registrar that the domain names shall be reenabled,” the order concludes.

    The memorandum opinion and order and final judgment can be found here and here (pdf)

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      MyCanal ne marche plus au Royaume-Uni à cause du Brexit

      Julien Lausson · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Thursday, 7 January, 2021 - 10:34

    Avec la survenue du Brexit, c'est aussi la portabilité des services de contenu en ligne qui en prend en un coup. Canal+ vient de le rappeler. [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

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      Humanity is in danger of becoming obsolete technology in LX 2048

      Jennifer Ouellette · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Sunday, 20 December, 2020 - 15:00 · 1 minute

    James D'Arcy stars as a terminally ill man who gets the chance to "upgrade" his life in Guy Moshe's sci-fi film LX 2048 .

    A fatally ill man tries to secure the future of his family in a near-future world where the toxicity of the Sun forces people to stay inside during the daytime in LX 2048 , starring James D'Arcy ( Agent Carter, Homeland ). It's a flawed yet thought-provoking surreal science-fiction film, chock-full of big ideas on our relationship to technology and what it means to be human and anchored by D'Arcy's fantastic performance.

    (Some spoilers below.)

    D'Arcy plays Adam Bird, a married father of three on the brink of divorce from his wife, Reena (Anna Brewster). The year is 2048, and people are largely living indoors during the day because the sunlight is powerful enough to scald human skin instantly. Everyone spends most of their time in a virtual world known as The Realm. (The fact that Reena caught Adam virtually cavorting with his AI lover is just one of their many marital issues.) Everyone also takes regular doses of LithiumX to ward off depression. Adam, however, clings to his old habits, driving a convertible to the office in a hazmat suit and refusing to take the drug.

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      NBA&#160;: où regarder le meilleur du basketball en streaming&#160;?

      Maxime Claudel · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Saturday, 19 December, 2020 - 11:07

    La NBA s'apprête à reprendre ses droits en fin d'année, après une saison 2019/2020 bouleversée par la crise sanitaire liée à la pandémie de coronavirus. Mais où et comment regarder les meilleurs matches en France ? [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

    L'article NBA : où regarder le meilleur du basketball en streaming ? est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

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      New U.S. Streaming Piracy Bill Focuses on Commercial Services

      Ernesto Van der Sar · news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Friday, 11 December, 2020 - 09:45 · 3 minutes

    Streaming Key Under U.S. law, streaming and file-sharing are seen as two different offenses. Not just from a technical point of view, but also in the way they are punished.

    Streaming is categorized as a public performance instead of distribution, which can only be charged as a misdemeanor, not a felony.

    Lawmakers tried to change this with the Commercial Felony Streaming Act in 2011 , and later with the SOPA and PIPA bills. These bills were shelved after public outrage, with many people fearing that uploading copyrighted YouTube videos could possibly land them in jail.

    As a result the gap between streaming and traditional file-sharing still remains today. This makes it hard to prosecute pirate streaming services. However, a new bill introduced by Senator Thom Tillis aims to change this.

    The bill, titled the ‘Protecting Lawful Streaming Act of 2020’, has bipartisan support and was drafted based on input from copyright holders, tech companies, and public rights experts. This resulted in a final draft that is less broad than previously proposed bills.

    In short, the bill proposes to amend US copyright law by adding a section that allows streaming piracy services to be targeted. It is tailored towards services that exploit streaming piracy for commercial gain, leaving individual streamers out of the crosshairs.

    Specifically, the bill makes it unlawful to provide a service that’s primarily designed to show copyright-infringing content, has no significant commercial purpose other than piracy, or is intentionally marketed to promote streaming piracy.

    Protecting Lawful Streaming Act of 2020

    The bill is targeting people or organizations that provide a “digital transmission service.” This means that it doesn’t apply to ordinary users who stream something on YouTube, Twitch, or any other streaming platform.

    This distinction is crucial as the opposition to previous bills focused on the fear that new legislation would send ordinary people to jail for accidentally streaming a copyrighted video or music track.

    Instead, the ‘Protecting Lawful Streaming Act of 2020’ intends to criminalize commercial streaming piracy services. Those who are caught face fines and a prison sentence, which for repeat offenders can extend to ten years.

    Commenting on the bill, Senator Tillis notes that pirate streaming services are costing the US economy billions of dollars every year. The new legislation should help to change this without criminalizing regular streamers.

    “This commonsense legislation was drafted with the input of creators, user groups, and technology companies and is narrowly targeted so that only criminal organizations are punished and that no individual streamer has to worry about the fear of prosecution,” Tillis said.

    Lawmakers received input from rightsholders as well as the CCIA, which includes prominent members such as Amazon, Cloudflare, Facebook, and Google. The CCIA has previously been critical of streaming felony bills, but it will now remain neutral.

    The same applies to the civil rights group Public Knowledge, which also helped in shaping the new bill. While Public Knowledge isn’t in favor of adding criminal penalties for copyright infringement, it sees the new proposal as a reasonable solution.

    “[T]his bill is narrowly tailored and avoids criminalizing users, who may do nothing more than click on a link, or upload a file. It also does not criminalize streamers who may include unlicensed works as part of their streams,” says Meredith Rose, Public Knowledge’s Senior Policy Counsel.

    With a more limited scope, the latest streaming piracy bill has a greater chance of passing than its predecessors. However, that doesn’t mean that there’s no opposition.

    Aside from its contents, which not everyone will agree with, there is fierce critique on the process. Instead of letting the bill pass through the regular process, it will be added to the must-pass spending bill , together with other copyright proposals. That is not how copyright law should be created, opponents warn.

    A copy of the text of the Protecting Lawful Streaming Act of 2020 can be found here . The bill is co-sponsored by Senators Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), John Cornyn (R-TX), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Chris Coons (D-DE), Kelly Loeffler (R-GA), and David Perdue (R-GA)

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart will return in new Apple TV+ series

      Samuel Axon · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 27 October, 2020 - 21:07

    Jon Stewart appears in a segment on <em>The Late Show with Stephen Colbert</em> post-<em>Daily Show</em> retirement.

    Enlarge / Jon Stewart appears in a segment on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert post- Daily Show retirement. (credit: CBS )

    Former The Daily Show host Jon Stewart has signed a multiyear deal with Apple TV+ to write, star in, and produce a current affairs show that Apple and Stewart expect to run for multiple seasons, according to a report from The Hollywood Reporter .

    Five years ago, comedian and commentator Jon Stewart departed his role hosting Comedy Central's The Daily Show —just a year before his audience would have wanted him most, many have observed .

    Since then, he has occasionally appeared to do small and infrequent segments on his former colleague Stephen Colbert's The Late Show on CBS, he's appeared in some media interviews, he directed one film, and he did a comedy tour with fellow topical comedian Dave Chapelle . Mostly, though, he has lived the family life at his farm in New Jersey .

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      Amazon Prime Video : voilà les nouveautés du mois de novembre !

      Victor Keller · news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Monday, 26 October, 2020 - 12:41 · 3 minutes

    De nouvelles séries, des films Amazon Originals, et des classiques du cinéma : le programme est chargé ce mois-ci sur Amazon Prime Video.

    Bénéficiez de 30 jours gratuits pour découvrir Amazon Prime vidéo !

    Les séries de novembre 2020 sur Prime Video

    • 1er Novembre : Heirs Of The Night – Saison 2
    Copyright FR_tmdb

    Rassurez-vous, cette série d’épouvante norvégienne, consacrée aux vampires, est plutôt grand public. Sa saison 1 est disponible sur Prime, en France, depuis juin 2020.

    • 6 novembre : Duncanville-  Saison 1

    Sitcom animé américain, Duncanville conte les mésaventures d’un adolescent pas très doué nommé Duncan. Les Français pourront découvrir les 11 épisodes de la saison 1 dès le 6 novembre.

    • 20 novembre : Motherland: Fort Salem – Saison 1
    Copyright Freeform/David Bukach

    Déjà forte de deux saisons, cette série se déroule dans une Amérique uchronique dans laquelle les sorcières cohabitent avec le commun des mortels. L’histoire se concentre sur trois d’entre elles qui s’engagent dans l’armée américaine.

    • 29 novembre :  Vikings – deuxième partie de la saison 5
    Copyright History

    Amazon Prime a réalisé un coup de maître en s’achetant les droits de Vikings, la série épique de la chaîne canadienne History. La deuxième partie de la cinquième saison débarque à la fin du mois sur le service de streaming.

    Les films Amazon Original de novembre 2020

    • 12 novembre : Connectés

    Un peu de contenu bien de chez nous pour changer : Connecté s est un mélange de thriller et de comédie avec, entre autres, Stéphane De Groodt, Michaël Youn et François-Xavier Demaison. Dans ce film, une bande d’amis organise un « apéro virtuel » en plein confinement, et tout ne se passe pas aussi bien que prévu.

    • 15 novembre : The Burnt Orange Heresy

    Il s’agit d’un film anglo-italien sorti en 2019. Adapté du roman « Hérésie » de Charles Willeford, le film narre le parcours d’un critique d’art qui cherche à s’approprier l’œuvre d’un peintre.

    • 25 novembre : Friendsgiving

    Portant à l’affiche Malin Åkerman et Kat Dennings, cette comédie américaine se déroule, vous l’aurez compris, pendant la fête de Thanksgiving (26 novembre aux États-Unis).

    • 25 novembre : Uncle Frank

    Alan Ball ( Banshee , Six Feet Under …) réalise ce film qui met Paul Bettany (Vision dans le MCU) à l’affiche. Uncle Frank raconte l’histoire de Frank, un professeur de littérature new-yorkais forcé de retourner dans sa campagne natale.

    Les autres films ajoutés en novembre sur Prime Video

    • 1er novembre : Deadpool
    Copyright Twentieth Century Fox

    Sorti en 2016, le premier volet de Deadpool avait constitué un interlude remarquable à tous les films de super-héros qui se prennent beaucoup trop au sérieux. Le film déjanté avec Ryan Reynolds dans le rôle titre sera disponible dès le début du mois sur Prime. Retrouvez notre critique de Deadpool .

    • 16 novembre : les deux franchises cinématographiques Alien et Predator

    Double dose de monstres ce mois-ci sur Amazon Prime Video. Toute la saga Alien ( Alien, Aliens, Alien³, Alien Ressurection, Alien Vs. Predator, Prometheus, Alien : Covenant ) ainsi que tous les films Predator ( Predator, Predator 2, Predators ) sera disponible sur la plateforme de streaming dès le 16 novembre. Si les innombrables suites de ces franchises ne font pas forcément l’unanimité, le premier Alien et Predator avec Arnold Schwarzenegger restent des incontournables.

    • Et aussi…

    L’excellent Snowden d’Oliver Stone arrive le 3 novembre, puis Mr. Holmes (où Ian McKellen incarne un Sherlock Holmes vieillissant) le 4, suivi de la comédie Ce que veulent les hommes (5 novembre), et des deux volets d’Independence Day ( Independence Day, Independence Day : Resurgence ) le 9 novembre. Enfin, le thriller norvégien The Tunnel débarque le 13 novembre sur Prime Video.

    Amazon Prime Video : voilà les nouveautés du mois de novembre !